Rodents!

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Albal

Active member
1st Year Member
Jun 1, 2023
58
70
Here’s an important suggestion. Put hardware cloth (metal screen) over the cabin air intake to keep rodents out of the cabin and the ductwork.

Most of the cars I’ve owned have this problem. Instead of screening off the intake properly they rely on that plastic piece at the base of the windshield, which never seems to work. Nowadays, the first thing I do when I get a car is epoxy a metal screen over the cabin air intake. It took me years to start doing this, but now there are no problems. If you want to be thorough, you can do the vents in the trunk too, where the air leaves. You just have to do a quick search for your favorite car brand and the word “mice” to see what a problem it is. And none of it would have happened if manufacturers had just spend a few cents to actually screen off the cabin air intake. I think this is especially important for a truck that is supposed to be spending its time outdoors!

On ICE cars there are some other spots as well, such as the engine air intake. If you don’t want mice nesting on your engine air filter, screen it off.

I imagine there will be additional spots on an EV as well, so review your design with mice in mind and snap on a metal screen over any opening that leads to to someplace you don’t want mice nesting. Perhaps something related to battery pack cooling? Who knows.
 
Absolutely, rodent proof with steel screening. I live on the edge of the forest so we have them all (except the big city rats). I have had a chipmunk stand on a spring and chew a hole in the side of the fuel pipe between the fuel door and the tank in my Tundra. Other critters took all the insulation off the firewall and hauled it into the fuse boxes in our RAV4. In both some critters settled into the a/c ducts, ate holes in the cabin air filters, chewed up the plastic frames that hold the filters, etc. So don't leave it to us, just slap a piece of 1/4' hardware cloth over all the entrances, just like IH did on the Scout 80s & 800s. It is my understanding that many of the plastics and insulation materials are now plant based, and thus more appealing to rodent palettes, some effort made to evaluate that factor in selecting materials will go a long way, too.
 
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